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Thank you very much for visiting.
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Love & Hugs,
Glen

Many tips to
improve child safety in your home and provide accident
prevention for toddlers and older kids. You'll also find tips pages for
pool and automobile safety.

Child Safety At Home:
Your house seems like such a nice safe place until you bring a
child in. Then you discover how unsafe it is. Don't worry if you or
we have forgotten anything important, your child will teach you what to secure.
This page contains a few things you probably don't want to learn by trial and
accident. Here' are the latest best-selling
Books on Child Personal Safety.

Toddler Safety Tips:
Toddlers are very different from babies because they're not
protected full-time by cribs, play pens and people. Toddlers are also
different from older kids because they understand and follow directions far less
though they're very mobile...even the ones who haven't quite put one foot in
front of the other. That's why toddlers get their own special child
safety section.
The best way to make a home safe for a toddler is to get on your hands and knees
and crawl around like they do. See what's interesting!
1. Electric outlets should have plugs or
covers in them.
2. Try pulling over every table, plant stand chair or
other item to see how easy it is. Replace the easy ones.
3. Don't use recliners or other mechanical furniture
until children are old enough to understand not to crawl under them.
4. Examine (feel) the underside of furniture for sharp
objects...staples, splinters, etc.
5. See what items (vases, glasses, books, pots) can be
pulled off of the furniture.
6. Install Child Safety Gates at entrances to
kitchen, laundry, garage, stairways, etc. (toddlers should never be in these
areas unless someone is carrying them-too many possible accidents).
7. Eliminate the doggy door until children are old
enough to understand it isn't for them (about age 23).
8. Keep all doors closed when not in the room (so
toddlers can't roam into bathrooms, bedrooms, etc.).
9. Keep pet food and water dishes in rooms the toddler
won't be in.
10. Don't use fireplace, wood stove, pellet stove or other
such item if toddler will be loose in room while it's still hot.
11. See if they can crawl behind furniture and put
blockades up.
12. Don't use table covers that can be pulled off, along
with everything on the cover. Now is the time to protect the kids, not the
furniture. You can get good furniture once they're older (about age 35).
13. Make sure nothing given to them has parts (wheels,
buttons, etc.) small enough to be pulled off and put in their mouth. If it
fits in their mouth they can choke on it.
14. Make sure nothing is in their areas that they can
wrap around their neck (like chords, strings, etc).
15. Make sure nothing is in their area they can put
their head in or cover their mouths with that is air tight (plastic bags,
wrapping paper, balloons, etc.).

See below for safety items for all kids.

Older Child Safety Tips:

1. Teach children from an early age about the dangers of
chemicals, soaps, garbage disposer, trash compactor, dishwasher, stove, oven,
blender, water heater, cars, washer/dryer, toilets/sinks, lawnmower, fireplace,
etc.
2. Do not allow children under 8 in kitchen, laundry
room or garage unsupervised.
3. Use Child Safety Latches on lower cabinets.
4. Store all chemicals, soaps, knives, appliances,
alcohol, vinegar, sweet items and all breakable items in upper cabinets, out of
reach. Locked pantry or cabinet would be best.
5. Install locks on any appliance or dangerous rooms that
small children can climb into (water heater closet, furnace closet,
refrigerator, washer, dryer, electrical panel area, etc.).
6. Make sure all items on counters, shelves and
workbenches (including appliance cords) are beyond the reach of small children.
7. Install Child Safety Alarms on cabinet doors so you know
when they're being opened. These are
great after the kids have learned to open the child-proof latches (at
about 18 months of age).
8. In garage, make sure all chemicals, solvents,
gasoline, oil sharp tools, power tools and breakable items are in securely
locked cabinets or on high shelves out of reach of small children.
9. Make sure all shelves are secured so they can't be
tipped over.
10. See to it all toys and safe tools for working on
toys are accessible without climbing or going into dangerous areas.
11. If you have the space, avoid trundle or bunk beds.
12. Make sure all windows can't be climbed into or out
of except for emergency.
13. Have a fire/earthquake evacuation plan with
meeting place assigned at least 50 feet from house, teach the plan and rehearse
it with your smoke detectors at least once a month. This also
forces you to test your smoke detectors.
14. Test all toys, tricycles and swing
sets for smaller kids to see if it's possible to break a finger, strangle,
or get other damage from the design.

Note: It's normal to be a little anxious about your
children's safety. The fact is, no matter how careful you are, they will
have accidents, get hurt and get sick. If you're very fortunate...that's
all. Knowing this, it wouldn't hurt to ask for a little more help than
these tips can offer. The biggest child safety tip I can think of is to
get help and wisdom from God. He can protect your child, heal an injured
child and help you with the child safety anxiety all parents have. If you
want God's help, click on help me
God.

Way2Hope News!

Always see a licensed medical practitioner before making changes in your health an fitness practices. Advice given at this website, or in conjunction with www.way2hope.org or e-Home Fellowship activities is not to replace the advice given by a licensed professional nor be taken as a counseling or clinical relationship but only as suggestion. We're just sharing things we've discovered, as regular untrained people. As a user of this website you bear full responsibility for your decisions and actions. External websites linked from this site are for information, only. We do not endorse any product, service or treatment. As a user of this website you bear full responsibility for your decisions regarding these products, services and treatments.

Bio: Glen
Williams is Director of E-Home Fellowship, Co. and Webmaster for
http://www.way2hope.org. He founded
EHF in 2001, after more than ten years of full-time service helping people with
life problems. Now, every month, people in over 160 countries come to EHF
websites for help with their problems.